South Africa: Black Spots

Nestled in a fertile valley 200 miles east of Johannesburg, the village
of Driefontein is a picture of rural contentment. Flower beds front
its comfortable houses, cattle browse in lush pastures, and fruit trees
abound. But Driefontein is different: it is a so-called "black spot,"
an area of black settlement surrounded mainly by white farmers. For
several years, in keeping with South Africa's policy of apartheid, the
government has tried to persuade the 7,000 black farmers of Driefontein
to move to black "homelands" in the desolate Kangwane and Kwazulu...